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tv   Your World With Neil Cavuto  FOX News  November 7, 2013 1:00pm-2:01pm PST

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just barely escaped. later that same day, galloping gertie plunged into the put sound, 73 years ago today. when news breaks out, we break in, see you then. >> sweet, sweet, twitter's rollout taking wall street by storm. is the white house taking notice? >> welcome. neil cavuto. twitter taking flight, and the price at 26 bucks a share company, quickly shooting up 73% at more than 45 bucks for a while, and stay at that level, pretty much all day long. that put twitter's market value at 24-1/2 billion dollars. about what delta airlines is worth. maybe the white house should
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have had these guys launch the web site, right? while this is being hailed as a big success, this is not. and we're all over it. we have fox business network's melissa francis, market watchers on what the white house could learn. doreen, what are we to make of this on a day otherwise -- you have general profit taking on the corner of wall and broad, the dow up 750 points. but this thing fired on all cylinders. >> ed did. it speaks to a lot of different things. i'm open the stock exchange so it speaks to us and our strength. and speaks to the company. it's a very well-thought of company. the thing that strikes me about the whole thing is how much money is out there and looking
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to be put to work in deals which the public thinks is a real good deal. >> pointing out here, the nyse got the deal north nasdaq, which many argued screwed up the facebook offering. whatever people think of this particular stock, and this company, what does it tell you about what could be the appetite for ipos or companies wanting to go public this year? >> even told me especially tech companies, neil, the situation is, this year so far, tech companies have had at least 35% pop. today it was 70%. double that number. so it shows the appetite for people wanting to be in these ipos and feels like back in the internet days when all that excitement happen. all you had to do is fine the right guy to get you an ipo and you can may money. that's what happened with people
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today. a nice big pop. right about $50 in that stock today. >> here's where the fraud questions comes. and i'll raise it with you doreen, the worry with runups like this, especially for companies who don't make money -- they have a great deal of promise but don't make money -- really back to larry's point about the internet boom and whether we're getting back to that. a lot of good features of the boom, included amazon.com and ebay, still with us today but many others are not. do you worry we're potentially repeating sinful behavior. >> one thing we learned from the past four or five years issue when we put our money to work, there's a certain risk tolerance everybody has, and markets are more aware of risk powers individually and institutions than ever before. the market in great part -- the pricing mechanism we have is developed and is decided upon by the investing public and the
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reply and demand ratio. so i have to believe that people getting into these things at these prices are happy to be there and happy to have the opportunity to participate or they would not be paying these prices. >> larry, without getting into the valuation of the company, whether it's worth in the mid-40s or whatever, it does raise another question about just how it was launched today. obviously not to repeat the sins of facebook when it went public and the nasdaq fiasco. wanted to make sure all their technical irs were dotted and t's crossed. dot that give you hope for the little guy, the average investor, who thinks this process is rigged against him? >> yes. i do think -- i think that everytime we have something bad happen, the facebook situation, the nasdaq has gone down, everytime that happens companies have to step up and throw money at the problem and fix the technology and build more redundancy in. so we have a situation where hopefully they're improving the situation. it eats at the bottom line but
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is necessary. the more bad things that happen, we'll make less of it in the future as people protect against it. >> thank you both very much. for those of you just tuning in, one of the most successful certainly in recent years ipos here, twitter, which really is all about explain what you're could go, whether you're getting coffee or breakfast, in 140 characters or less, and now making a lot of money for founders, a lot of rich founders. >> the new york stock exchange making sure this all worked. the white house acknowledging initial enrollment numbers will not be pretty. >> they'll be low in october. we acknowledged that. they would always be low, and that is when we did not expect the problems with the web site that occurred. >> now we're getting an idea just how long, at its launch the site was capable of handling
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1100 years. that's according to the documents just released. in comparison the nyse was able to handle north of 150 million shares. back and forth, back and forth. scott martin says, no surprise. melissa francis, fox business network, says the same. a lesson there. i don't know how to apply it in washington but what do you think? >> i think it's there's no competition. i mean, the -- saw what happened to the nasdaq. they have seen business lead. they lost money as a result of what happened on facebook. even then trading was stopped for a short period of time. we're a month into obamacare and they're still having trouble with the web site. can you imagine if only six shares were able to trade hands today? but the government has no competition. they're forcing people buy this insurance. they have no incentive to get out there and make sure everything is okay. the stock exchange spent the weekend testing their system. the government couldn't be bothered to buy enough servers to handle the traffic.
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it's all about profit motive, and if it's not there it doesn't get done. >> interesting view, scott. melissa's point, with the government, there's no alternative. when the nasdaq, failing or not, botched the whole facebook thing there, was an alternative for other companies and twitter turned to new york stock exchange. with the government it's like one shop stop, and even though a lot of people don't like the shop. >> no. and that shop can open and close whenever it wants. remember, the exchange opens at 9:30 a.m. eastern. well, the first trade in twitter wasn't until minutes, even close to an hour after that and that's important to note because along that period, the new york stock exchange was matching up orders. they're using this time-tested, evaluative process to make sure the orders were done right. the u.s. government with the healthcare.gov did nothing of the sort, and that's why it's been a complete failure so far.
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>> you know, melissa to your point as well, if you know you have something big coming and the twitter folks were in nervos about this. they were sweating this one out. but by that gone through drill after drill, working through the weekend, practicing. we now learned in retrospect there was not a lot of that either technical or fundamental preparation or drilling or practice for this healthcare debut, and it showed. >> absolutely. it's like anything when you do. it's going to be a huge challenge, delivering a speech, whatever, you process and think below what could go wrong and you fix it. that's exactly what the stock exchange did. they had people phoning in orders. they practiced. they rehearsed to make sure it dent happen. the government did none of that. and it's not even hard to do. i mean, technology is fairly straightforward. the other problem is they're not in that business. this is another reason why -- >> at least get people who are in the business.
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grab a twitter guy you. don't have to talk to them very long because they speak in 140 characters or less. so grab them and -- >> or someone from microsoft. >> a lot of these guys would have happily volunteered their time. jeff bezos. is it too late for that? >> i don't think it's too late for that. i'm guessing maybe the ceos of the companies file suspended because they weren't asked, and that's the funny thing. what i love about this deal today, -- twitter was tweeting live about what was going on with the pricing of the ipo. nobody knows what is in healthcare.gov. so they have reached out and, the googles and apples saying we have the big guys helping us who know what they're doing. >> thank you very much. we are reading tweets from executives, i'm rich, i'm rich. anyway, after the rollout, calls are mounting for secretary kathleen sebelius to get out. ten republican senators sending
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a letter to the president urging her to fire her and fast. such a complicated beast here. i don't know who takes the blame but she is in charge. >> i'm surprised she is still there let me go back and say i think today proves wall street is just as delusional as washington. this may be a great company, but for crying out loud, it's priced at 50 times the revenue. maybe some days it will prove it has a business model that can earn money, but it proved today is that wall street is a casino inhabited by day traders and robots who are on the drug that the fed is feed feeding, and everyone is speculating like crazy. so wall street is failing and wall street is -- >> i'm going to put you down as a member on twitter. you could have argued the same win amazon came out, when ebay came out.
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mine -- >> you're taking only those that survived. there's ten that never did that were valued this way -- >> so you don't think this is a survivor -- >> i don't know. i have no idea. i think -- >> you mentioned the fed and all the money it's pouring into the market. 85 -- >> unbalanced, unhealthy market -- >> this reflects is -- >> massive speculation. the fed has a prop under everything and is giving the wrong signal to traders and washington. >> what about the way you set up for this? let's say it's all of that. at least it was launched in an orderly manner so you take a circumstance discuss some orderly launch it, there is any lesson to be learned in. >> the lesson is that the government never should have been involved in healthcare.gov in the first place. this is not a matter of yes men telling obama the wrong thing. this is a matter of bad ideas, fundamentally flawed design,
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that is wrecking our whole health system. >> you're all saying we're all being to varying degrees delusional. wall street running to something look this with no proven value. and washington, on a healthcare abyss that hased out yet. >> it's even beyond that. when you say that we need more command, control, coverage, and sub days, the heart of obamacare, that's the office of what are bloated, inefficient, failing healthcare system needs. we need more consumer choice, more competition, more accountability by individuals and providers. we need less coverage and out of pocket -- >> we're getting none of that. you would like to junk this thing now. >> of course. >> that's not going to happen. the president apparently -- folks who met with the president last night, democrats are urging him to cool it. he is saying, no, no, steady as she goes. >> that's why wire heading
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towards the cliff. washington is heading toward a massive fiscal blowup in the same way the fed and wall street are heading towards another massive bubble that will soon -- >> i want to get seasons of -- get a sense of your shape thoughts. washington is getting ready to implode and wall street is getting ready to explode. where does david stockman go for happiness? >> it's all part of the same keynesian idea, that oursel vacation comes from the beltway, that the state can make everybody -- >> wall street likes the fed -- >> wall street likes the fed. wall street done want any disturbances in the budget issues. kick the can. we'll get it to next we're. we want the gdp to inch forward by a couple points so we can bid up the stock price. everybody knives the same delusional bubble. and it's all going to compound in obamacare is going to end up costing hundreds of billions a year more than they've already admitted.
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>> all righty. have a nice dinner, a nice life. all right. something else. remember that -- depends on what the meaning of the word "is" is. another lawyer, different president, same legalees.
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>> here's the things about presidents, they can find just the right word to confuse just about any of us. remember bill clinton? >> i did not have sexual real relations with that woman. >> focus on the same plausibility of deniability right here. >> if you like your healthcare plan, you can keep your healthcare plan. >> judge napolitano is a lawyer,
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and a damn good one. he says the president finding just the right legal words don't make them any less lying. the president left out the possibility you might pay through the nose for it or have disruptions because of this, your company might do something, but -- is that a legal cover? >> well, the president doesn't have to worry legally about lying. even though the president and the justice department can prosecutor people, americans who lie to the government, the president and the whole governmental apparatus-free to lie to us. that's not me saying it. that's what the supreme court says, and the president knows that. so the consequences to the president lying, whether it's bill clinton or richard nixon or barack obama, are political consequences, not legal consequences. >> in this president's case, as you opinioned out, it's far more arerejoice, why? -- agee grouse, why. >> richard nixon told his knowledge of a break-in, a bauer. bill clinton told a lie about a
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private personal sexual liaison. barack obama told a lie, remeetedly, regularly, consistently, over and over again, about the wealth that will affect the wealth, and health of millions of innocent americans. the first two, which ensnared nixon and clinton, are into insignificants compared to these lies. and when he says that you like yourhawk heck, you can keep it, like your doctor, you can keep it, he then says, period. using the word "period" means, i guarantee you and assure you of the accuracy and truthfulness. >> but the legal statement, period, you could say, well, i said you can keep your plan. i didn't say that you might not end up paying more for it. right? i guess what i'm asking you, as a great lawyer, that you leave yourself some wiggle room. >> in his open mind he left wiggle room but he seriously
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deceived the american public. we live in the fret state of new jersey, 882,000 people learn in the past three weeks in the state of new jersey, that they don't have their health insurance anymore. they have to get it from another source. that's 882,000 policies, these are innocent human beings who had every reason to believe the president was telling them the truth. the political ramifications are, the democrats, who voted for this monstrosity, who must seek re-election a year from now, will flee from the president. >> that will be the political fallout. i just want to throw this out there. the president really didn't know. he didn't lie. he was just ignorant or didn't know basic economics and you can't promise everything and expect that people -- and insurance companies aren't going charge you more. >> the american public knows this is a former professor of constitutional law, the dealt for in chief of the harvard law
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review, and he is talking about his signature piece of legislation to which his hole approximated -- presidency is dedicated. he didn't know? hard to believe. >> just trying to be fair and balancees. thank you, judge. >> pleasure. >> from politician to might lie, to inspectors who search for answers. what they just found in syria, and a guy who just got back from there, who says you don't even know the half of it here. need a tow or lock your keys in the car, geico's emergency roadside assistance is there 24/7. oh dear, i got a flat tire. hmmm. uh... yeah, can you find a take where it's a bit more dramatic on that last line, yeah? yeah i got it right here. someone help me!!! i have a flat tire!!! well it's good... good for me. what do you think? geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
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to syria now where inspectors just verified another chemical weapons site. bringing the total up to 22. the team still has one more site to check out, and it won't come
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easy because of the location and the nearby fighting. the weapons are not the whole story. michael clemente is my boss, he traveled to syria as part of the team that interviewed president assad. remember that? one of othings that is interesting -- i want to get into that experience interviewing him. but you had a chance to travel around syria. they know their country is a target. they know the whole world is watching its leader. what was your sense? >> 60% of it is rubble. and not under reconstruction. it was odd. life was going on, in a war zone you expect bunkers and positions and sort of the enemy is there and the city is over there. this is completely coamingled.
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-- commingleled, so live point the bedlam. >> who do they blame for the confusion? >> they blame -- most syrians hear what is on syrian television or radio, and whether you're a rebel or genuinely al qaeda, they're all called terrorists so they blame the terrorists. >> so assad citiedded in con -- succeeded in convincing them, these are awful guys and i'm trying to protect you. >> in a state when you're primarily worried about dinner or your kids, any protection from that, whether it's a guy who may or may not have been elected democratically, is of less concern, i think. again, we were there for five days but less -- concern beside just having a meal and not have a bomb drop on your head. neighbors are fighting neighbors. >> and gunfire all around you. it's like bedlam. >> yep. >> let me ask you about when they hear the possibility of
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either the united states alone or with other countries, getting involved and trying to take out these chemical weapons, maybe even take out assad, they have to be looking up and saying, oh, no. >> they almost all said the same thing. we went in churches and it was, stay away, stay out. leave us alone. >> why? >> i don't think they see any -- this is not a political statement -- but any record anywhere where they haven't been shown it -- of intervention that actually led to something better. they just know it's complete turmoil, and we have a guy who is trying to protect us. that's what they've been shown. >> what about the hundreds of thousands who have been killed -- far more of those by conventional means-not even chemical weapons. they must know some of these people. >> they do but it's -- -- i'll tell you how normal it was. the other night when i got the
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e-mail about the shooting at the mall in new jersey, i had the shiver we all have. feels like every other day it's a school or a mall or something. some shooting and you think, oh, -- six weeks ago or five weeks ago, the equivalent of a mall, part of the sold city where they're selling scarves, a lighter day in the shelling, and a bomb went off four or five locks away. i shook but i looked at everyone else and they sort of went like that and then they have a brief conversation, how far was that? three or four or five blocks, and within less than ten seconds life resumes. let's go look at the scarves over there finish big our clothes. i thought, that's normal? it's that normal? >> that's just the -- you traveled all over the world. before you came here. worked at abc news, traveled with peter jennings, so you have been to the hot spot.
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i wonder where syria ranks among the crazy hot spots. everyone says it's on fire now and going to get worse, and we cannot help but not find ourselves ultimately there. >> it's got to be in the top ten. there's a lot of the world we don't see and we don't cover and we're not allowed in there, which is part of the problem. we were allowed in to do the interview 0, so what pictures we took and a couple of still photos were with minders. but it's a mess, and to try to think of it as a country rather than areas that have groups of people that have stationed in their own areas, that's an easy way to think about it. that's your area, this is my area. can someone hold it together through force? of course. but i'm looking at some of the pictures here. this is a little boy in beirut. we were there for five days, and through the translator we asked him -- he came over to try to shine our shoes. and we said, where are you from?
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he just come from a camp outside of beirut because he and his six siblings had lost their parents in a bombing in syria. he is a little syrian boy. and he didn't know how to shine shoes. he had a little kit and was trying to make in money to get dinner and feed his buddies, and there's that all over the place. even there, this is a little dunkin' doughnuts and the owner was twirling a broomstick, and as soon as the kid chased the kid out of there. off the deck. and we bought him some doughnuts and his buddies came over and we bought them doughnuts and they had something to eat. but the scale of human suffering, even without the cameras, it's just -- we will try to cover it and i think we should all be mindful of it going into thanksgiving. spin the globe, and it's bad. >> he was there in the eye of the storm. >> thanks for spending spendinge on this today. >> oh, no.
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this just in. reports of rats abandoning ship. everyone wants to know what happened at the super secret emergency meeting among top-ranking democrats and the president. reports are they wanted to put off -- democratic sources tell me a number of things happened.
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you did have about 15 democratic senators up for re-election, nervous about defending the healthcare law in 2014, pressing the president to maybe delay enrollment, delay the fines, maybe for a few months, maybe up to a year. i'm told the president pushed back and said he's not going to do that but was open to their ideas, i'm told by democrats in the senate, he was listening to them. they felt like it was a productive session back and forth. the other thing they were pressing him on is the web site. why is it still not up and running? democratic dick durbin told us they are confident they're going to get the web site fixed by the end of november, and then after that the benefits will kick in, and the president believes they're going to get this thing fixed. i have to say there are republicans on capitol hill who are pushing back and saying this shows how nervous the democrats are right now about the mid-term elections. take a listen. >> there's no -- in yesterday's meeting or any other meeting
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about this, the concerns that defcrats have about the rollout of the market places are the same concerns the president has, which is the web site is not functioning effectively. >> that is going to keep getting uglier and uglier, hence the emergency meeting at the white house yesterday with the president among his allies who walked the plank over this and they're scared. >> reporter: the other question is when will the white house release enrollment figures for the month of october. jay carney trying to lower expectations even lower by saying today they're going to be extremely low. they think they'll get better in the months ahead but the numbers for october are expected to be very low. >> meanwhile, democrats are nervous, particularly those up for re-election next year. from real clear politics saying they should be nervous. how vulnerable an issue does this make them? >> very vulnerable, and let's go back in time her for a second, back in 2010. we saw an overwhelming turnover
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of the house based on obamacare and that was before things have gotten as bad as now in to 2014 we'll see the same thing happen in the senate, and taking you back in history, do we remember at the town hall meeting in august of 2009 when a young won stood up to senator arlen specter and said you have awakened a sleeping giant. he had turned into a democrat. he lost his election the next year. this race next year is about senate democrats only losing their only races and losing power in the senate as 15 people are up for re-election and could potentially turn those seats over to republicans. >> but republicans are not without intraparty squabbles themes, and, tom, how much will that affect or does this wash out evenlily? >> well, don't their -- certainly you have some tea party challenges going on in kentucky.
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south carolina. but i think as far as obamacare goes, all republicans of all stripes have lined up against this law and are pretty unified on it, and they're -- no matter who the nominee is, whether it's an establishment republican or tea party republican they're going to be banging the drum on this issue for next november. >> katy, at this time, the employer mandate kicks in, the one that was delayed and all the problems associated with that. so the that re-ignite all the anxious. >> and you had kathleen sebelius say the grandfather applies to employer plans and millions of mentales are losing insurance on the individual market and going to see more employers dumping them off into the obama car exchanges which at this point aren't working. >> just wondering whether that's has broader implications for and against big government or give
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people pause. i don't know how that works out in polls. i'm wondering how it works out with americans' view of this is too much. enough. >> well, certainly i think it plays into the republicans' hands no question about that. as far as how it's going to go, look, neil, the web site could -- the glitches with the web site could be a distant enemy -- memory next move, but the stories of people being thrown off their policies and rate shock, and they may get worse next year. so it's one of those things that obamacare looks like it's going to be a factor, along with the economy and the president's job approval next november. >> thank you very much. in the meantime so many democrats are worried. up next, remembering a time few of them really were. the last time the overwhelming consensus among democrats was they had nothing to worry about. other 5 years ago when their most popular post war president was getting ready to tie up
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political loose ends in texas to button down the big election win. the big election he would never see. we look back after this.
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>> 53 years ago tomorrow we elected that guy president of the united states. and just 1,036 days later he was dead. as we near the 50th 50th anniversary of john kennedy's assassination, still so maybe questions surrounding that day. we're trying to get those answers and have a stunning special report airing saturday at 9:00 p.m. on the fox news channel. >> november 22, 1963, the day begins with an excited welcome for president kennedy outside his fort worth, texas, hotel in nearby dallas, oswald is going to work with a hidden rifle.
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>> the blanket looked like campaign equipment. never occurred there might be a gun. >> it is 8:45 central time in less than four hours, president kennedy will be dead. >> what did you discover that is new without giving it away? >> i think you will come away with this undenying belief about how many people doubt what the government tells them. you have the warren commission 50 years ago that said it's oswald. you can hang it on them. then you have a house committee 15 years later that get together and do their own investigation and say no chance. we don't believe the warren commission. this is gary cornwell, an attorney who worked on the house committee in 1977. even to this day, he is a doubter. >> the warren commission in the end, just flat-ass lied to us. >> gary cornwell was deputy chief council of the house select committee on assays
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nations. -- assassinations. this group looked at the kennedy investigation. >> they never intended to investigate. >> he is far from alone, too. you're going to meet another guy, john orr, works for the department of justice and hasn't talked in ten years. he did his own investigation and gave it to janet reno. she gave it to the fbi. he hasn't heard a word since there are bullets and on the bullet thursday fragments, maybe it's part of dna or tissue or comes from clothing, something that governor connally or the president worse that day. if you can take the material, dna that never dies, and test it 50 years later with the technology we have, maybe you can determine whether people like gary and john orr are right and that a second gunman fired a different bullet at kennedy that day in dallas. >> i remember when it was bobby kennedy's children who were on a talk show that said their father
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went to his grave not believing the warren commission. that the others had to have been involved. and of course bobby kennedy, always wrestled whether he contributed to it by going after the mob. it's amazing. still 50 years after the fact how we're fixated on this event. >> remember now, this was lbj sworn in on air force one back to washington. what did they want to make sure did not happen? was that lyndon johnson -- did he have a role in this? some conspiracy theorists believe. was it soviet union? cuba? the mob or somebody in dallas, texas, that day, working with oswald? if that story were to catch fire, the theorists believe that's a story that the world could not handle, because then you're looking at a major conflict between two superpowers in the early. 90s. >> and major cries. >> our investigation recreated
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the scene in dealy plaza. >> we'll watch saturday night. bill gets to the bottom of it. we'll have more after this.
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now she's getting a raw deal. idaho high school basketball coach lorain cook has been fired from her job after posting this picture on facebook. the man in the photo ask her fiance and also a coworker. he was rep remanded but will keep his job. did the school get it right? the attorney thinks so.
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we reached out to the school district so you can comment, nothing. all right. here's what i don't understand. why is this overboard? is it overboard? >> i think this is crazy because i understand if the school's position is that she posted something inappropriate. what exactly did the boyfriend do to warrant a reprimand? he didn't post anything. >> i don't think she should be posted at all. what she posted was not illegal, immoral, didn't affect the school or minors. >> maybe minors seeing that would be offended. >> it's not as if it was presented in a forum where a minor would see it. to me the school is really going overboard and using the fact it was posted to stand in for the content of the post being
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inappropriate. >> i think the woman is an idiot and should have gotten fired. your a teacher. >> she's not nude. >> doesn't matter. >> if she was a lawyer at my firm, she would be out. i wouldn't want her to -- i don't care who that is. that's ridiculous. no class, no taste. >> i want to be clear. because she puts this up, she's got to go? >> yes. >> not him? >> he didn't put it up. it's not his facebook page. >> but it's his hand on her breast. >> she's the one that thought it was funny. it reveals she has no class, no sense. >> so you're not on the basis of kids looking at this? >> it could be. it's public.
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i'm looking at it now. i'm done seeing it actually. >> if you're going to tell me they're going to fire a teacher because on facebook she used your three times instead of you're. that would be something to do with her job. >> she's the grammar police. >> it's what she's doing on her private time in her private life. it's not even offensive. >> it's not consistent. you're talking about whether this affects kids. the impressionable boys at the school are bgoing to say about her now husband, way to go. no punishment for you. >> there's no difference between having a picture of that on facebook versus having the woman do the same thing at a party and someone seeing it. >> it would be out of her
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control. >> we don't know the school is saying because she posted it. >> it's basically her holding up a sign saying i'm a moron. >> if i'm a parent at this school, i say look at the teachers. >> what would you say about the guy? >> nothing. he's the one grabbing. what's the big deal. >> he's not the one stupid enough to put it on his facebook page. >> he knew she would. >> honey, i'm going to put this on facebook. okay. >> you don't know that for sure. you're a terrible witness. >> i don't know. meanwhile the story of tweets that could make you sick. not these ladies. [ female announcer ] who are we?
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turning dreamers into business owners. so ally bank has a that wothat's correct.a rate. cause i'm really nervous about getting trapped. why's that? uh, mark? go get help! i have my reasons. look, you don't have to feel trapped with our raise your rate cd. if our rate on this cd goes up, yours can too. oh that sounds nice. don't feel trapped with the ally raise your rate cd. ally bank. your money needs an ally. how do you teach washington to launch a big initiative in 140 characters or less. i can do it in seven. twitter. it launched close to flawlessly
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today. i'm not saying you have to like twitter or even use twitter. i barely understand twitter or believe that a market value north of $20 billion is right for twitter. focus on only this about twitter. how it got up and running for the first big day of training in new york. it provides a lesson forfolks in washington. it prepared for the big day. let's just say a lot different than how washington prepared for the health care law's big day. twitter tested the appetite for offering months earlier and continued to fine tune its. the administration didn't seem to care whether there was an appetite just ran it. the stock exchange tested whether the combined systems could handle the expected demand. the administration worked with itself and clearly never factored in any demand.
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for twitter's big day they had countless drills for every continge contingenty. for health care they had one and it failed each. millions of investors right out the day for twitter. health care debut, half a dozen as it launched the first day. that's the difference between launching right and wrong between practice makes perfect and no practice makes no sense. between appreciating anything can happen and being surprised by everything that can happen. between caring about your buyers and clearly not giving a damn about your buyers. between performance incompetence. the others explaining how it was and botched it. leave it to service all about
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tweets to make washington look like a bunch of twits. that will do it. see you tonight. caution. hello everyone. i'm greg. who's counting america? so the only thing obama care has successfully produced are jokes about obama care. >> hey do you have that obama care? >> obama care, what's that? >> oh it's great. it's great. >> what is it? >> i started signing up last thursday. i'm almost done. >> obama care by morning why is it taking so

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